One-hand timepieces have been known dating back to the sundial, followed by tower clocks, the four-hour dial, the six-hour dial, twelve-hour dial, and finally, 24-hour dial. The four and six-hour-dial types have had six and four subdials respectively, to represent all 24 hours of a typical day. The twelve-hour dial is easier to learn and is more understandable than the four-and-six-hour dial but the 12-hour dial provides inadequate space to indicate minutes. The 24-hour dial provides even less space to indicate minutes.
A timekeeping device is provided with eight evenly spaced hour marks and between the hour marks are 11 evenly spaced minute marks that represent 5 minutes. The hour marks can be numbered in a way to place midnight or noon at the top of the dial and the PM mark numbers can be increased, adding 12 to each to establish a 24-hour (military) format. preferably the hour marks are comprised of two columns of numbers and six hour mark lines.
The subject eight-hour dial allows uncluttered room for minutes and is easy to learn because all hour values are duplicated exactly across the dial from one another, thus reducing the learning curve substantially. The subject invention was actually a discovery. It happened because a watch owned by the inventor was running 50% too fast and could not be easily corrected. Thus, the best remedy for the overly fast movement was to make an eight-hour dial that could accurately accommodate the faulty watch.
The subject invention with an eight-hour dial provides a unique advantage that sets it apart from all others: All three values for each of the daily 24 hours are repeated exactly across the dial from each other, thus making the format much easier to learn since knowing just half of the positions implicitly means the other half are also known. Another feature not found in other dial formats is that the starting point of the day (12 AM) can be placed at either the top or bottom of the dial. And finally, the dial can be set in a 24-hour format simply by adding 12 to each of the PM hours.
The drawing shows a timekeeping dial with eight evenly spaced hour mark lines, 11 evenly spaced minute mark lines between the first two hours and three numbers at the top of the dial to indicate 12 AM, 8 AM and 4 PM and three numbers at the bottom to indicate 4 AM, 12 PM and 8 PM.
A timekeeping device having one hand and eight evenly spaced hour marker lines with 11 smaller minute marker lines between the hour marker lines provides one-hand simplicity and adequate space between hour marker lines to accurately indicate time to the nearest minute. The eight-hour format provides distinct advantages over previous one-hand timekeeping devices. For example, the hand is always within two hours (% of the dial) of one of the upper or lower reference points, so that a user can easily go back or forward to one of the points and determine what hour of the day the hand is indicating and then determine the exact minutes. For a dial to provide this function, the number of hours in the dial must be less than 24 but the number must be evenly divisible into 24 but not divisible into 12. Hence an eight-hour dial is optimal.
Alternatively, the dial may contain hour marks without five-minute marks, and the watch face may have a subdial with a minute-hand or an image of a minute-hand which sweeps through 360 degrees in a one-hour period. The subdial could have 12 five-minute marks or another suitable arrangement of minute marks.
A watch or clock can be made having an electrically or spring-powered movement which turns a shaft to which the hand is affixed. Alternatively, a processor or microprocessor and screen can be utilized to create an image of a moving hand. The screen could have hour marks and five-minute marks inscribed or images of the marks can be generated along with generating the image of the moving hand. A watch would normally include a movement, a shaft, to turn the clock or watch hand, a crystal or a glass plate for a clock, a case, a crown for adjustment of the hand position and or winding a spring on a watch or an adjustment/winding knob for a clock, and a bezel for a watch.
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